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TRANSCRIPT
How to win the 3 minute thesis
Dr Inger Mewburn (aka @thesiswhisperer)Director of research trainingThe Australian National Universitywww.thesiswhisperer.com
In this presentation we will
Talk about bad presentations
Look at some examples of the 3MT in action
Go through some steps to help you make one
What is the 3MT?
In other words, it shouldn't be like this:
Why are some presentations bad?
What other students have said
Too technicalToo much on each slide No structure to talkReading from notes Unclear speech Nervous speakerToo simple Weird body languageSmall font / wacky fonts / yellow font on white backgroundBusy backgrounds
Let's look at some 3MT contestants in action
Barlarka Banerjee
Jack Midalek
Sumaiya Ahmed
Jamie Flynn
Daniel Crabtree
A good 3MT presentation...
Doesn't try to say too muchIs delivered slowly.Has expression (pauses, rises, falls and stresses)Includes a story, metaphor or emotional elementGives concrete examplesDoesn't ‘telegraph’ Tells you things you didn't expect to hear about the topic
Anything else?
A framework for action
In "Made to Stick" Chip and Dan Heath claim that thisformula makes information rich presentations unforgettable:
SimpleUnexpectedConcreteCredible (we won't deal with this)EmotionalStories
Let's work on Simple
Complete the following sentence.
"The purpose of my research is..." (add max 50 words)
Share your sentence and we'll workshop some of them.
Let's work on Unexpected
Tell us an interesting fact about your research!
All of you will know something that has probably ceased being of interest to you, but is new to us.
For example:
● Silver turns your tongue blue.● The chemical that makes bananas go brown probably causes
alzheimer disease.● Watering a plant is good because you are giving it electrons.
Take a few minutes to think about it, then share one if you can.
Let's work on Concrete
Close your eyes... and listen to me
Emotions you can always work with
"What's in it for me?" (WIFM)
"Oh, how sad :-("
"Interesting!"
"That's mysterious..."
Final advice
People don’t remember everything you said, but they always remember how you made them feel.
Emotions
In research writing we are told not to resort to emotional arguments, but in the 3MT it is essential. Here's some emotions you can work with:
"What's in it for me?" (WIFM)"Oh, how sad :-(""Interesting!""That's mysterious..."
You need to convey your passion for your work too, but be aware of the possibility of 'topic fatigue' in the audience.
Story
Including a story can help you work in an emotional angle
Good stories include the following elements:
Characters (they don't have to be human)A beginning, middle and end (not necessarily in that order)Some kind of change or transformationA "call to action"
Read this blog post "Story telling in business" for more ideas.
What should go on the slide
Resist temptation!
Don't rely on it as a presentation aideChoose one 'hero' image or diagramTitle can be a question, or your actual titlePut your name and contact details on it
May the force be with you!
For more advice and ideas head to the Thesis Whisperer blog which has a section on presenting
Before you leave!
Read about how to participate in the 3MT at ANU